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Dvar for Tzav (Leviticus 6:1-8:36)

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Wed, Mar 21, 2018 3:05 PM

This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar (one of my
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Our Parsha, Tzav, informs us that the priests’ first task of the day was to
remove the ashes from the offering sacrificed the previous day (Leviticus
6:3). Is there any significance to this being the priests’ first order of
business with which to start the day?

Rabbi Avi Weiss explains that the priest begins the day by removing the
ashes to illustrate the importance of his remaining involved with the
mundane. Too often, those who rise to important positions separate
themselves from the people and abandon the everyday menial tasks. By
starting the day with ash-cleaning, the Torah insists it shouldn’t be this
way.

A few years ago a couple appeared before Rabbi Gifter, asking him to rule
on a family dispute. The husband, a member of Rabbi Gifter’s kollel (an all
day Torah learning program) felt that, as one who studied Torah, it was
beneath his dignity to take out the garbage. His wife felt otherwise. Rabbi
Gifter concluded that while the husband should in fact help his wife he had
no legal religious obligation to remove the trash. The next morning, before
the early services, Rabbi Gifter knocked at the door of the young couple.
Startled, the young man asked Rabbi Gifter in. No, responded Rabbi Gifter,
I've not come to socialize but to take out your garbage. You may believe
it's beneath your dignity, but it's not beneath mine. This message comes to
us courtesy of the sacrificial ashes.

Shlomo Ressler


Quotation of the Week:
"The first to apologize is the bravest. The first to forgive is the
strongest. The first to move on is the happiest."

This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar (one of my favorites)... _______________________________________________ Our Parsha, Tzav, informs us that the priests’ first task of the day was to remove the ashes from the offering sacrificed the previous day (Leviticus 6:3). Is there any significance to this being the priests’ first order of business with which to start the day? Rabbi Avi Weiss explains that the priest begins the day by removing the ashes to illustrate the importance of his remaining involved with the mundane. Too often, those who rise to important positions separate themselves from the people and abandon the everyday menial tasks. By starting the day with ash-cleaning, the Torah insists it shouldn’t be this way. A few years ago a couple appeared before Rabbi Gifter, asking him to rule on a family dispute. The husband, a member of Rabbi Gifter’s kollel (an all day Torah learning program) felt that, as one who studied Torah, it was beneath his dignity to take out the garbage. His wife felt otherwise. Rabbi Gifter concluded that while the husband should in fact help his wife he had no legal religious obligation to remove the trash. The next morning, before the early services, Rabbi Gifter knocked at the door of the young couple. Startled, the young man asked Rabbi Gifter in. No, responded Rabbi Gifter, I've not come to socialize but to take out your garbage. You may believe it's beneath your dignity, but it's not beneath mine. This message comes to us courtesy of the sacrificial ashes. Shlomo Ressler _______________________________________________ Quotation of the Week: "The first to apologize is the bravest. The first to forgive is the strongest. The first to move on is the happiest."